UN says it wants control of Aleppo humanitarian corridors

The UN’s Syria envoy has called on Russia to let the UN take charge of humanitarian corridors to allow civilians to flee from the besieged city.

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"Our suggestion is to Russia to actually leave the corridors being established at their initiative to us," said UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura.

"How can you expect people to want to walk through a corridor, thousands of them, while there is shelling, bombing, fighting."

"The clock is ticking for the Aleppo population," said de Mistura, who estimated that essential supplies including food in the east were likely to run out within three weeks.

France, meanwhile, said corridors out of the city were not "a credible response to the situation" and residents should be able to receive aid at home.

Washington also reacted sharply, with US Secretary of State John Kerry declaring that if Russia’s humanitarian operation for Aleppo is a ruse, it carries the risk of "completely breaking apart the ... cooperation” between his country and Moscow.

“On the other hand, if we’re able to work it out today and have a complete understanding of what is happening and then agreement on (the) way forward, it could actually open up some possibilities,” he was quoted by Reuters as saying.

Kerry said that he had been on the phone with Moscow twice in the past 24 hours.

Pro-regime forces have surrounded Aleppo's eastern districts since July 17, leaving an estimated 250,000 trapped without reliable access to food or medical aid.

The Red Cross welcomed the corridors but said Russia and pro-government forces had an obligation to protect everyone in Aleppo, once Syria's economic hub and a battleground city seen as key in its five-year-old conflict.

"Those who decide, for whatever reason, to stay in eastern Aleppo must be protected, and all sides must allow humanitarian agencies to reach and assess their well-being and needs," the International Committee of the Red Cross said.

‘Terrible existential dilemma’

Residents have reported food shortages and spiralling prices in rebel districts since regime forces cut off the opposition's main supply route into the northern city.

The US-based International Rescue Committee said those left behind in east Aleppo risked starvation and called for a humanitarian pause in fighting.

"The people of Aleppo should not be forced to choose between fleeing their homes and remaining under attack in a besieged area," said IRC's acting Middle East director Zoe Daniels.

Analyst Karim Bitar said that: "Aleppo residents are facing a terrible existential dilemma, they often have to chose between risking starvation or risking to die while fleeing."

"If the objective is really to ensure the safety of Aleppo residents, why aren't aid workers and ICRC getting sufficient access to the civilians in dire need of protection?" he asked

"Aleppo residents are in distress and mistrustful, which is understandable, as the Syrian tragedy has shown that even humanitarianism is often used as a cynical ploy to advance geopolitical interests," said Bitar, from the French think-tank IRIS.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has said three humanitarian corridors were being opened "to aid civilians held hostage by terrorists and for fighters wishing to lay down their arms".

"We are ready to do everything we can to deliver aid to peaceful citizens who are hostages of the terrorists, and even to those militants who wish to lay down arms," Antonov was quoted as saying.

Residents holed indoors

But only a few Aleppo residents were able to leave eastern neighbourhoods through the passages before rebels prevented them from fleeing, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"Around 12 people managed to use the Bustan al-Qasr corridor before rebel groups reinforced security measures and prevented families from approaching the corridors," the monitoring group's head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

An AFP correspondent in east Aleppo said streets were empty on Friday morning, with residents holed up indoors.

Shops were shuttered and generators in several neighbourhoods had stopped after their fuel ran out.

Ahmad Ramadan from the opposition Syrian National Coalition accused Russia and the regime of forcing civilians to flee through continued bombing raids.

"What is happening now is not battles, but the complete and systematic destruction of the city and its residents, whether they are civilians or fighters," he said.

Analysts say that losing Aleppo would be a major blow for the armed opposition and could signal a turning point in the conflict, which began in 2011 with the brutal crackdown of anti-government protests.

"In Aleppo, getting civilians to leave would both serve its propaganda and its military objectives," said Emile Hokayem, senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

"The regime uses massive, indiscriminate force to brutalise civilians to force them to kneel or reject the rebel groups," he said of regime tactics.

More than 280,000 have been killed in Syria's devastating war that has seen the spread of jihadist groups and dragged in world powers seeking to stem their growth.

A US-led coalition is conducting an aerial campaign against the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group, which despite battlefield losses still controls areas of north and northeastern Syria.

The Observatory said that the death toll from coalition strikes Thursday on the IS group-controlled town of Ghandoura had risen to 28 civilians, including children.

The town is near Manbij, a strategic point on the road between Turkey and the IS group bastion of Raqqa, and came after the coalition opened a formal investigation to determine whether nearby air strikes last week claimed dozens of civilian lives.

The IS group, meanwhile, executed 24 civilians in a village close to Manbij, after seizing Buyir from a Kurdish-Arab alliance, the Observatory said.